Wheelie bin dispute rolls on

A ROW over the introduction of opinion-splitting wheelie bins in Malvern continues.

Malvern Hills District Council is pressing ahead with plans to give people green plastic bins for their recycling, which will be emptied every fortnight. The existing weekly black bag collection for general refuse will continue unchanged.

But one member of the controlling Tory party is adamant that the change has been pushed through without the authorisation of the councillors who represent members of the public.

Councillor Tony Warburton maintains that councillors only agreed to pursue £1.67 million government funding for waste collection during a vote last year, and that they should have been consulted before any changes were implemented.

Council leader David Hughes dismissed the suggestion, stating the council’s intentions were “explicit” and that the only talk of it returning for further discussion was in the event that the government funding bid had failed.

Coun Warburton has also said suggestions by the council’s head of community services Ivor Pumfrey that the consequence of not switching to wheelie bins for recycling would spell the end of weekly black bag collections.

“I want to say, categorically, that no such suggestion has ever been made nor has the possibility ever been discussed by councillors,” he said. However Mr Pumfrey said that failing to introduce wheelie bins would “inevitably” have meant a switch to fortnightly general refuse collections.

Comments(5)

Terry The Binman says...
9:01pm Thu 7 Feb 13

...meanwhile, in Libya

sarah and her chickens says...
9:58pm Thu 7 Feb 13

meanwhile in malvern we spend £1.6 million on wheelie bins whilst elderly in hospitals are left malnourished due to staff shortages as hospitals !

spider666 says...
11:27am Fri 8 Feb 13

sarah and her chickens wrote:
meanwhile in malvern we spend £1.6 million on wheelie bins whilst elderly in hospitals are left malnourished due to staff shortages as hospitals !
I might be wrong here but i would of thought that collecting recycleable material would save on landfill costs and bring in revenue when it is sold on to recycle companies,therefore the £1.6 million would be recouped.We have fortnightly collections with alternate green and black bins and it seems to work well enough.

sarah and her chickens says...
10:18pm Fri 8 Feb 13

Nice in theory spider 666 however in reality we spend £1.6 million in three years and end up with a service that costs £300 000 more a year to run !!
Just to recycle 400 tonnes of glass.
That is simply not economical. That money could actually help people,make a difference to the quality of peoples lives. But no MHDC want wheelie bins,so that's what we get.

its all spin says...
1:58am Sat 9 Feb 13

I was very happy when Worcester introduced wheelie bins and would hate to go back to flimsy plastic bags, as to cost, I'm sure there are many things we could point our finger at and say don't spend the money on that, spend it on this instead.

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